A single sell order worth approximately $67 million drove Bitcoin's (BTC) price to $47,600 on decentralized perpetuals exchange Lighter - a 30% drop that lasted seconds and unfolded while bitcoin was simultaneously trading above $69,000 on major venues.
The episode exposed a structural vulnerability on a platform that has seen its liquidity erode sharply since its token airdrop.
The incident was isolated entirely to Lighter's order book and did not reflect any broader market dislocation.
During the same session, bitcoin surged from below $64,000 to above $69,000 on major exchanges, one of its strongest intraday rallies in weeks.
What Happened
A sell order of roughly 1,000 BTC overwhelmed available bids on Lighter's order book, pushing the price down to approximately $47,600 before recovering almost instantly.
Pseudonymous Web3 developer 0xTimberJ described the mechanics in a Discord post: the order wiped out all available bids on a thinner-than-usual book, sending the local price spiraling with no offsetting liquidity to absorb it.
The recovery was equally rapid once bids reappeared.
Flash crashes of this type are not unusual on venues with shallow order books. In shallow markets, even a modestly sized order can sweep through multiple price levels, producing extreme short-lived prints that don't correspond to prevailing market prices elsewhere.
Read also: BlackRock Is Building An ETH Staking ETF While Equity Treasury Plays Burn - Here's The Divide
Why It Matters
Lighter's liquidity has deteriorated significantly since late 2025. The platform processed over $292 billion in monthly volume in November - roughly a quarter of the $1.15 trillion traded across exchanges at the time - after traders ramped up activity to farm its token airdrop.
Since the airdrop concluded, those participants have rotated out. Monthly volume fell to $70 billion in February, out of a $500 billion total market, per The Block data. Hyperliquid, Aster and EdgeX have each maintained higher volumes.
The thinner order book that resulted from this activity drop is precisely what made Wednesday's crash possible. A $67 million sell order is not extraordinary by the standards of liquid venues, where such trades routinely clear without meaningful price impact. On Lighter's current book, it was enough to temporarily obliterate the bid side entirely.
Lighter, founded in 2024, competes in the decentralized perpetual futures market - the dominant derivatives product in cryptocurrency, allowing leveraged long and short positions without contract expirations.
The platform went through Y Combinator and has positioned itself as a challenger to Hyperliquid but has yet to sustain the market share it briefly captured during the airdrop period.
Read next: Retail Investors Are Now Choosing Stocks Over Crypto - And The Data Is Hard To Ignore



